A unionist paramilitary group calling itself the ‘Real UFF’ has
admitted responsibility for planting a pipe bomb at the home of a
former Sinn Féin member in Antrim.

The device was found yesterday in the Somerset Park home in the
Rathenraw estate of Aine Gribbon, who left Sinn Féin and stood as an
independent republican candidate in the 2005 council elections.

The British Army bomb disposal unit discovered the pipe bomb in the
house shortly after 1am following searches in Antrim and Randalstown.

The ‘Real UFF’, which is thought to have been set up by former UDA
members once close to the Shoukri gang in north Belfast, admitted
responsibility for the attack.

Ms Gribbon, a mother-of-nine, is a close associate of Paddy Murray, a
prominent and controversial figure in local republican circles.

Murray has organised republican opposition Sinn Féin and the peace
process, but has recently been forced to deny claims that he was
working as an informer. Republican hardliners are reported to be
sceptical of his denial. Sinn Féin has also strongly opposed Murray’s
activities in Antrim and have called for the PSNI to reveal the truth
over the ‘informer’ claims.

Unionist representative in south Antrim Ken Wilkinson said he took the
‘Real UFF’s claim “with a pinch of salt”.

“I’ve never heard of them in Antrim,” he said. “Loyalism would have no
interest in Aine Gribbon. It’s very convenient for people to hide
behind names.”

One newspaper report which linked the Real IRA to the attack. The
report in a Belfast newspaper claimed the bomb was part of a trade-off
between the Real IRA and the criminal loyalist gang. It also claimed
the Real IRA had received arms with the assistance of loyalist
drug-smugglers.

The report in the Irish News newspaper was blasted as “black
propoganda” by the 32 County Sovereignty Movement, which has links to
the ‘Real IRA’.

In a statement, the 32CSM said: “Attempts to link Oglaigh na hEireann
to drug dealers and loyalists is an exercise in barrel scrapping which
will not fool a single person who has any knowledge of the use of black
propaganda in the conflict in Ireland.

“We would also advise republicans to be vigilant at this time as such a
story may have another sinister purpose. It is possible that this story
has been planted in advance of moves to eliminate members of the
republican movement and then to write it off as simply a fall out
between criminals, thus absolving the British and their pro-Stormont
allies from any blame.”

* Members of the unionist paramilitary UVF have been blamed for a
paramilitary-style ‘punishment’ that saw two men forced to walk with
placards along the loyalist Shankill Road on Friday.

One of the men appeared to have been assaulted, with blackened eyes and
cuts and bruising to his face and head. Both carried placards with ‘I’m
a thief and a burglar’ written crudely across them.